U.Va. Drama’s performance of “How to Live on Earth” asks what it means to relate to one another
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Indie-rock band Pinegrove recently released their fifth album “11:11” Jan. 28, marking the band’s second album since their year-long hiatus following sexual coercion allegations leveled against lead singer and founder Evan Stephens Hall.
“The Power of the Dog” played at the Paramount Oct. 30 as part of the Virginia Film Festival and is set to be released in the United States Nov. 17. An opening shot displays cows and horses without a human in sight. Director Jane Campion imbues animals with a darkly divine aura by way of long, slow close-ups featuring horses’ and cows’ faces and their searching eyes. The film progresses slowly and sensually, taking care to develop characters and their movements in the spaces they inhabit. Within the uniquely American cultural consciousness, no other genre seems to persist so strongly as the Western, from the lasting legacy of John Wayne to continuous revisionaries like “Django Unchained” or “Nomadland.”
This Tuesday evening Briston Maroney took the stage downtown at The Southern, drawing a young and exuberant crowd to the charming Charlottesville venue. The 23-year-old singer-songwriter from Knoxville, Tenn. started his "Sunflower" world tour on Sept. 9. Making his public debut in 2013 as a contestant on American Idol, Maroney sang and played guitar in the bluegrass band Subtle Clutch from 2013 to 2015 before independently releasing two EPs and then signing onto Canvasback Music and Atlantic Records.
Actor and rapper Nora Lum — most commonly known by the moniker Awkwafina — is the star and creator of new series “Awkwafina is Nora from Queens,” which premiered Wednesday night on Comedy Central. Nora, the protagonist, is a fictionalized version of Awkwafina, who also grew up in Queens, N.Y., with her father and grandmother.
“Modern Love,” Amazon Prime Video’s anthology series, premiered Friday. Written and directed by John Carney, the eight-episode series features Dev Patel, University alumna Tina Fey, Anne Hathaway and Ed Sheeran. The series is based on the popular weekly New York Times column of the same name, which is now in its 15th year and even has its own podcast.
Frankie Cosmos, the indie rock band headed by Greta Kline, released their fourth album, “Close it Quietly,” Friday. The album was produced by Sub Pop Records in Brooklyn. Initially using the moniker Ingrid Superstar, Manhattan native Kline began recording music in 2009 in her room, uploading her work to Bandcamp. Inspired by poet Frank O’Hara, Kline began to release work under the name Frankie Cosmos in 2011. Like O’Hara, Kline is inspired by and writes about mundane subject matter within the cityscape of New York. She released her first album under Frankie Cosmos, “Zentropy,” in 2014, a work dedicated to the loss of her dog Joe Joe.
Gold Connections, the Charlottesville indie rock band headed by Will Marsh, released their second EP, “Like A Shadow” Friday, March 1. The EP comes after their 2017 debut album “Popular Fiction.”
After a five-year hiatus, Deerhunter presents their eighth album, “Why Hasn’t Everything Already Disappeared?” Highly anticipated by fans, the album delivers the result such a lengthy break implicitly promises.
“Ben is Back” opens in a beautiful church on Christmas Eve, where Holly Burns (Julia Roberts) watches her daughter sing while her two small children run to hug her. Just as the scene approaches melodrama, Holly threatens to make her kids come to church more than once a year.
Each year, for one week, theaters across the world screen the Manhattan Film Festival’s selection of finalist films. Unlike other festivals, the audience gets to participate, voting on their favorite film and actor after the showing.